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Evolution D.1 Origin of Life on Earth – PART 1 Fundamental questions that have plagued humankind…. • Where do we come from? • How did life start on Earth? • What were our ancestors like millions of years ago? Problems for starting life on Earth • How could the lifeless ball of rock that the planet Earth was 3.5 billion years ago, become home to such lush vegetation and a wide variety of bacteria, fungi, protists, and animals that we see today? • There are 4 problems which needed to be overcome for the life on Earth to exist. 1. Non-Living Synthesis of Simple Organic Molecules • Life as we know it is based on organic molecules, such as amino acids • Early Earth only had inorganic matter: rocks, minerals, gases, water…. • Organic chemicals may have been generated on Earth or they may have been introduced from space 2. Assembly of these molecules into polymers • Organisms are organized! • Simple organic molecules would have needed to undergo a process of polymerization to form the larger more complex organic chemicals required by cells. 3. Origin of self-replicating molecules (makes inheritance possible) • For something to be “alive” it must reproduce on its own. • Need a self-replicating molecule • Only self-replicating molecules are able to undergo evolution by natural selection • DNA is the molecule most used for replication of organisms but it is complex and requires enzymes for its formation. • Therefore, it is unlikely that DNA developed very early. • Also, to get the proteins required to form from DNA, RNA is required 4. Packaging these molecules into membranes • Water is important to life but tends to depolymerize molecules • Many compounds dissolve in water- difficult to organize into polymers • The formation of closed membranes is likely an early and important event in the origin of cellular life • It allows for the development of an internal chemistry different from the external environment Miller and Urey • Stanley Miller and Harold Urey performed a groundbreaking experiment in 1953 concerning the origin of life on Earth. • Scientific evidence suggests that the Earth is ~5 billion years old. • Formed from a coagulation of dust particles surrounding the Sun • In the early life of the planet, the atmosphere contained hydrogen, water vapour, methane, ammonia, nitrogen, and hydrogen sulfide- but no oxygen (O2) • Thought that synthesis of biological molecules must have formed in the shallow waters of the ocean s as the products of chemical reactions between compounds in the atmosphere and the water. • Mixture is known as the “primordial soup” (primeval soup or chemical soup) • (abiogenesis: the creating for organic matter from inorganic matter) Miller and Urey’s experiment • Tried to recreate the primordial soup in a glass sphere based on environmental conditions of the time. • Tried introducing gases they believed to be present at the time (methane, H2, NH3) • Introduced H2O which has heated to evaporation and cooled to condense – thereby recreating the H2O cycle. • They kept the system at a warm temperature • Exposed the apparatus to UV radiation (no ozone layer at the time) • Generated electric sparks to simulate lightning Miller and Urey’s Experiment • After 1 week: • 15% of the carbon was now found in organic form • 13 of the 20 amino acids had formed inside the primordial soup • Sugars had formed • The nitrogenous base adenine had formed Could comets have brought organic compounds to Earth? Panspermia • Hypothesis that life on Earth may have originated by the introduction of organic chemicals or even bacteria via comets • Comet: small body of rock, dust, and ice that orbits the Sun • Geological records show that our planet was bombarded by a shower of comets and asteroids about 4 billion years ago (Late Heavy Bombardment) • Organic molecules hitchhiking on comets could survive the impact and the impact could help to polymerize certain amino acids into polypeptides) Could life exist on a comet in the extreme conditions in space? • Some bacteria and archaebacteria can survive in extreme environments (Bacterial endospores found in ice cores in Antarctica) • Cosmic radiation could provide the energy to form complex organic molecules • By studying spectral lines of distant clouds of cosmic dust particles, astronomers claim to have revealed the presence of glycine, which is the simplest amino acids. This suggest organic molecules can form in space Other possible locations for the synthesis of organic compounds? • • • • Alternating wet/dry conditions? Near volcanoes? In deep oceans? Mars Alternating Wet Dry Conditions • On earth at a seashore or the flood plains of a river where there is an alternation of wet –dry conditions • The drying of clay particles could have created catalyzing reactions and formed early organic molecules Stromatolites • Stromatolites – formed in shallow water by trapping and binding sediments of biofilms of microorganisms • One of the most ancient forms of life on Earth Near Volcanoes • Although volcanic eruptions can be destructive, they spew out water vapour, other gases and various minerals which could be used to form organic matter • The rich sources of raw materials plus the warmth of the volcanic activity could have produced conditions favourable for the formation of amino acids and sugars. In deep oceans • Organic molecules could have formed around hydrothermal vents – places where hot water emanated from beneath the ocean floor. • Form when cracks in the crust of the seabed expose sea water to rocks below which are heated by magma • The hot water rises and picks up countless minerals along the way. • Hydrothermal vents are sometimes referred to as black smokers because the water coming out of t them contains so many dark minerals it looks like smoke. • There are entire communities living around these vents that we did not know about before • Ex: meter long white an red tube worms that absorb the minerals from the water and transfer it to symbiotic bacteria (the bacteria then makes food for the worm) • Proves that life can exist at the bottom of the ocean – despite lack of sunlight • This environment could be suitable for the formation of biological polymers Mars • As mentioned before, life could have formed extra terrestrially on a nearby planet or in space. • While Earth was still too hot, Mars – being smaller and further from the Sun – would be cooler and prebiotic evolution could have occurred there • These organic molecules could have been blasted from the surface of Mars by an asteroid and comet impacts • Meteorites from Mars (possibly containing fossilized bacteria) have been found in Antarctica D1 Origins of Life Part 2 The role of RNA in Early Life • In order to transmit hereditary traits to the next generation, most organisms today store their genetic code in the form of DNA • DNA replication requires enzymes, and since the prebiotic world didn’t have enzymes, it is unlikely that double stranded DNA was the means of inheritance in the first organisms. • RNA can replicate itself without the aid of enzymes • Thus, RNA may be the early nucleic acid for hereditary. Ribozymes • Small sequences of RNA can act like enzymes – these are called RIBOZYMES • Ribozymes can act on themselves and other RNA sequences • In lab tests, ribozymes can perform the reactions of RNA replication Protobionts • In the millions of years following the creation of organic compounds in the primordial soup, these compounds became more complex. • Amino acids, monosaccharides, nucleic acids would have undergone polymerization • This process may have occurred in shallow rock pools, particularly those where organic compounds had accumulated by absorption on the surface of clay particles • WHY? • When clay dries out and is heated, as many as 200 amino acids can spontaneously join together in polypeptide chains. • In the right conditions, these chains can form proteinoid microspheres – tiny bubble-like structures (like a vesicle) • They could establish and maintain a chemistry inside which is different from the surrounding environment • Coacervate - a microscopic sphere that forms from lipids in water. • Forms spontaneously due to the hydrophobic forces between the water and lipid molecules. • Also can maintain an internal chemical environment different from the surrounding environments. • Coacervates can be selectively permeable Coacervates (lipids) • Although they are not living organisms, proteinoid microspheres and coacervates are a significant step toward the formation of cells. • They solve the problem of protecting polymers from their destructive environments. • Could be primitive versions of the first cell membranes • PROTOBIONTS – the first precursors to cells, were likely coacervate droplets which included polynucleotides (DNA or RNA) • (remember our cell membranes are lipid based) • Overtime, true cell membranes evolved and other characteristics of cells developed. o Cellular respiration o Asexual reproduction Where did all the oxygen come from? • 1/5 of the air you are breathing right now is oxygen. • However, there was none at all present 4 billion years ago. • The earliest life forms on Earth were bacteria and they lived in an environment with an atmosphere of mostly CO2 • Thus, early life forms were anaerobic cells • These single-celled organisms would consume organic molecules (i.e. simple sugars) that were forming from chemical reactions on Earth • The more they reproduced, the more food that was consumed. • After million of years, their population would have reached such large numbers that food began to be scarce. • In this food shortage, bacteria that could make their own food would have an advantage. • ~3.5 billion years ago, bacteria (that is believed to be related to today’s cyanobacteria)developed the ability to photosynthesize. • Must have contained a form of chlorophyll • Development of photosynthesis was one of the most significant evens in the history of Earth • Gives bacteria a source of energy (sunlight) to survive • Created a mass pollution of the atmosphere o Pollution of oxygen!!! • Oxygen gas is toxic to the kinds of bacteria which preceded photosynthetic ones, so this pollution would have eventually killed off large populations of anaerobes. • Anaerobic bacteria that survived would live in mud of places protected from the new oxygen-rich atmosphere. • The ability of an organism to make its own food gives it a distinct advantage over those that cannot. • As a result, photosynthetic bacteria proliferated and produced more and more oxygen Endosymbiosis • 3.8-2 bya, bacteria (prokaryotic cells) were the only organisms on Earth • The first fossils of cells with a nucleus (eukaryotes) is from around 2 bya. • How did prokaryotes develop into eukaryotes? • Endosymbiosis is the most popular theory Endosymbiotic Theory • Organelles that are found inside eukaryotic cells today were once independent prokaryotic cells. • They were engulfed by a bigger prokaryotic cell. • Rather than being digested, the prokaryotes were kept alive inside the host cell in exchange for their services Endosymbiotic Theory • The host cell would provide protection for the smaller prokaryotic cell • The engulfed cell would be beneficial to the host if it was photosynthetic (providing food) for the host or able to metabolize food efficiently and produce energy for the host. • Explains how membrane bound organelles such as chloroplasts and mitochondria became part of eukaryotic cells. Problems with Endosymbiosis • The ability to engulf another cell and have it survive in the cytoplasm does not guarantee that the host cell can pass it on to its offspring the genetic code to synthesize the newly acquired organelle • When chloroplasts or mitochondria are removed from a cell, they cannot survive on their own.